Your web-browser is very outdated, and as such, this website may not display properly. Please consider upgrading to a modern, faster and more secure browser. Click here to do so.
We are working with some talented authors who have chosen to self publish online. Read up on this new trend in this article from the LA Times.
3 notes
Here are some new free fonts. Take a look! Did they capture the image of Darth Vador?
25 New Free High-Quality Fonts - Smashing Magazine
2 notes
Thanks for the tips!
dugganmedia:
Further details and comparisons on their site. They also didn’t mention rowfeeder.com, which I’ve been using and works great with google docs spreadsheets.
Amplify’d from www.searchenginejournal.com
Thx for reading!
- ChuckFurther details and comparisons on their…
5 notes (via dugganmedia)
Here’s another… Which are most helpful to you? Do we need the FCC to play a bigger role at this point in time?
Robert M. McDowell: The FCC’s Threat to Internet Freedom - WSJ.com
An interesting op-ed on the state of net-neutrality. The issue and threat it seems to me comes not from companies preventing access but governments. Im not sure we should be adding a level of regulation to this, it doesn’t make sense. Censorship in this new world will create issues, significant ones. I imagine it will only be a matter of time before the UN creates an IMF style org to oversea the digital world. When/if that happens I have significant concerns about the freedom in a broader sense…
What do you think is net-neutrality an issue where we say it’s not broke don’t fix it?
3 notes (via mhandy1)
Has anyone used these? What do you think is the hardest element to translate from a computer to a mobile device?
2 notes
Love the graphic design. It looks like Netherlands/ Denmark designs from days of old…
weandthecolor:
Monocle - Finland Survey
by Vesa Sammalisto
__
posted by weandthecolor//facebook//twitter
33 notes (via weandthecolor)
We’ll try and post some different perspectives on the FCC meetings and talks throughout the next couple of days. Here’s 1! …
The rules would ban high-speed Internet providers like Comcast Corp and Verizon Communications from blocking lawful traffic, while recognizing the need to manage network congestion and perhaps charge based on Internet usage.
(Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal, which is in negotiations to be acquired by Comcast.)
The rules, to be somewhat looser for wireless Internet, could help cable companies in competition with plans by Microsoft Corp, Google Inc and Amazon.com to deliver competing video content over the same Internet lines the cable companies run to customers’ homes.
In other words, the FCC and the Obama Administration buckled when it came to ensuring that all data is treated equally on the Internet. This opens the door for a la carte Internet service. Want YouTube? That’s $9 extra a month. Google? $5. Email? $6 (or you could just use our service which is free!).
BS, through and through.
6 notes (via world-shaker)
Page 1 of 11